_ THE PONTIAC PRE SS - Agreemen kek ke PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 1954 —cs PAGES t Near on Rearming Bon Drizzle Abates as Game Opens ‘Under Dull Sky eed Oeaee Cleveland’s Wynn By JACK HAND NEW YORK (® Fans tric- kied into the soggy bleach- ers of the Polo Grounds several hours ahead of game time today as the New York Giants and Cleveland In- dians squared off for the second game of the World Series under leaden skies. A morning drizzle stopped before noon and-the fore- cast was cloudy skies for the afternoon with @ thance of thundershowers by eve- the Giants. The Indians, to even up the series after the Giants won a Wynn (23-11) to the mound. He is a_ right-hander and i him is Young Johnny Antonellj (21-7), a lefty. Willie Mays: ‘I Just Catch 'Em’ Wham! ‘Game’s Over Now’ Bditor’s Note: Jim (Dusty) Rhodes came off the bench im the 10th inning yesterday to deliver @ pinch-three rum homer that gave the Giants a 6-2 victory ovér the Indians th the first game of the 1064 World Sesies-—in the following dispatch, be tells how he did it -By JIM (DUSTY) RHODES NEW YORK (UP)—The skipper told me to “grab a | bat” in the 1Qfh inning but I guess I reached out and | grabbed the brass ring instead. Happy! I don’t know the right-words to describe the feeling I got when I saw that white ball hit that grey overhang in right field for a homer. -It was the best hit I ever collected in my life. Even before the 10th inning came along, we al! sat there in the dugout and kept waiting and waiting. ~* Then after Willie Mays and Hank Thompson got on, the skipper, Leo Du- ! | rocher, called out: “Rhodes _|grab a bat.” I didn’t stand .. } around waiting to be told a ' | second time. e Bob Lemon's first pitch to me Ss |was a high curve ball. I liked s |the looks of it real fine, So I went after it. The next thing | knew she was sailing out toward the promised land. I looked at it and looked at it. I said to myself, ‘‘the ball game's all over row.” . Starting Pitcher Leo to Dusty: ‘Grab a Bat;’ Square D Pact Restores Calm to Labor Front DETROIT (# — The set- tlement of the violenced- marked Square D Co. strike troit today for the first time in 34 months. | Agreement came sudden- lly yesterday, a day after three strike leaders were | jailed for 30 days and fined '$250 each for contempt of la court order against mass | picketing. za instatement demanded their jobs back ahead of arbitration. The union, calling owt its 1.200 members, went on strike June 15. Wages and a company demand for jan iron-clad no-strike clause were Prolonged Seige Ends) as UE Calls. Members| to Ratify Ceasefire | cea, ed tem Pontiac Starts Yum, Yum, You Should Try een 2 Fe me | perm 4 » § ae This One restored labor peace to De-| @& Pentiae Frese Phete comparing opinions, are Davy Marson, Contagious TASTING AND TESTING—Chocolate pudding was one of the items tested yesterday at the Oakland County TB sanatorium by representatives of five | Hospital; Mrs. Mable Spence, Children's Home; county institutions, From results of the taste tests | Miss Edith Bandeen, TH Sanatorium: Mrs. Tony brands of food to be purchased by the county during | Martinez, Sheriff's Department and Mrs Hazel the--coming year will be decided upon | Above, | Batzioff, Infirmary - + - . 7 . . . . Nibble. 150 Entries — Taste Appeal Sweepstakes Full Production | Calls Last of 18,000 “Pass the bicarbonate please, dear.” PT on A tarpaulin which had been teaus. Ths maine ele placed over the aed was re he “*| Back Monday os New| This was probably a routine request in at least 15 ee tae The last of the strike probabty | Models Roll Oakland County homes last night as a result of the Because of the delay in getting hee not been heard. Rep. Cardy | ie Motor Division's full county's second annual “tasting bee” at the TB Sana- short their batting practice investiguied House Un- | Complement fave over. the field to the Indians suntan hates Committee Sin ne A be = = be ee from a institutions and repre- which a member. Monday, Or! Givision sentati purchasing department tested sumes full production model an eet ives. (R-Wis) called the strike an instru | Critehfield, general manager, an- | best-serve the county's needs and still have the most oe. eat et Crpeneniats, ‘Ths UE 60 | Gouaped tatey. taste appeal. + ximatel 1 " “ ” ° ee ae suns wes The 15 gourmets pres- t ° on - M Who Fleeced crarecover operation which began ent at yesterday's tests rep- [. Ip ee in Home ’ Sept. 3 have been ‘asked to report | resented the jail, infirmary, General Thinks U. S. - Police Out of $15 |# a TB sanatorium, children’s f Sth Month EARLY WYNN A White Lake Township man ‘ majerity these em | home —— to Strike Back (Indians) was robbed yesterday of $5,000 by Gets 20 Days oe So et eee oe pital and contagious hos- or or Victory three men who threatened to “burn plant, a . istration Hours |e." Sete = eee en ee caeeet | The maximum number of people| "BY having each of them partic-| Safety Council Reports WAREENGTOR #) — newet Registration where he hept his money. Glover, 31, will spend the next 20 affected during the model change- | pate in the taste test we cut down) voor, Eotalities Down Gen. James A. Van Fleet submits : According to Oakland County | aavy in jail, over period was 3,700 Critchfield|on complaints and the system : to the Pentagon today his co |for-Vojers Revealed Sheriff's Deputies Ted Gunn and |“ police testified they gave Glover | said. saves the county money,” said| by 6 Pet. From ‘53 Shelton Stites, the robbery victim, . fidential report on Allied military Ray Shotwell, 65, of 1424 Porter $15 last Aug. 19 to make a pur ish L. H. Gertz, county purchasing! CHICAGO w—Month by month strength in the Far East—where| City Glerk Ade . Bvany re [pi an elderly farmer, was talk- chase from a suspected narcotics | 8 Companies Extingy Seeuiie: | penis’ shienes-60-coeting bask alive he thinks América should strike miinded Pontiac voters today ing with A. O. Brisbois of 2254) 1. $15 vanished Blaze in a Wastebasket Testers ——— different | from wa automobile trip is getting back for victory. that her effice will be open until arleeE e who came Arrested-in Detroit this week, | LOS ANGELES (UP) — Eight | brands of fifteen todd trom num | - Van Fleet, who told the Senate| * p-, teday and tomorrow to dh mde Lo] ea piannd-galiey-tataveny |OUR OY EUIS peed I | SoS ts eeetr Sal and Gocene| The Medical Salty Comal 4 internal security subcommittee | accep, registrations. — conversion was sentenced | a municipal w smoke marked : Both - choices on a ballot at MT le tate it | al a | eS Oa | a is wan | em ht cea ep nS th + fot possible in Korea, expects Wat! noon Saturday and traffic deaths have been cut his report with Defense Secretary ai 7 armed with a revolver and de- McCallum yesterday. Glover didn't | basket next to an air-conditioner | (is secret ballot system would be Chartes E. Wim * |e tant Gay on atch registre: | Goch tee uote mm Onoteen [Oreo techn Gant wn crter Gowen | caving cf chest 10) Wee” The former Sth Army com- | tien for the Nov. 4 election may | containing his savings, and an- / _ | the end of August 1953 traffic mander in Korea went to the Par | be sade, , | other $15 in change trom Bris- B U L L ET | N uae at Gee & ae deaths totaled 24,200; “the same East on a confidential mission . bois. rs as and strawberry getatin, time this year they amounted to for President Eisenhower. He More ‘Weather 22,7hO, a cut of 6 per cent. sald, ho. coukd atmo Ms a. mal et us af ee DETROIT (UP) — Freddie Hutchinson resigned | |, Testers moved about tables im) Aueust's toll of 3.300 was the Seen ee S| tae naar me nec | Soe See icned| olay se manager of the Detroit Tigers after the |Win wns an arc Mg can expect some ; and a jon per his personal feelings. mere wet weather, the U. S.1¢s hewn dene, ond two ofthe board of directors turned down his demand for a = from August 1983. He: told--the oc =o by | Weather Bureau says. met, were called “Steve” and) Rew contract. Many speculative remarks were), “There is a Teal chance now to So Sane Para |r el Gro ese man |_g_ Derelt Preient Water O. (Spe), riers n-ne total eter waa he that Gen. Omar N. » ; or : ma ’ . mer chairman of the U. 8. Joint Es ccanctecet ramn| itele tap, potien-onte - formed Hutchinson by télephone that the directors ie i ee an amted dnc | Dearborn, council president, said, Chiets of Staff, and Gen J.|Friday, The low tonight will be would not offer him a two-year contract. iei- a major dramatic step in an! Reply Charges ade FHA Probe .- - effort to avoid World War III. . to M at Al i 2 — : 5 i He said the U. 8. should quit | | le lana sl oe ine ee Bn e. _ ee i=. o : the Unite? Nations if Red Chita ir. : i seated ana tore tte wot | LWA OST esitadents tRE O oa omes “i the .. A majority of résidents in a 24 | for Eastern “Michigan . for taiture {its hearings in New York, Cape-| Senator Capehart stating that she | which the Colwell firm and county | ways, landscaping, bathroom tile Asked about the Korean War. home subdivision east -of Walled |1g"sct on Hobby’s complaint, promised to “get to the bot-| ig perfectly satisfied with the con-| health department are investigat-, and outside paint Van Fleet said “there were Many! take yesterday voiced few com- - tom of this.’ ; | opportunities when we (the U. N.| plaints against construction of their; Them he called for a more ef- Ynty bh oe ae ee - | “Ht we add many extras they forces) could have advanced great | prefabricated housts, but a min- fective complaint when spots where daylight could be seen | “*- Another lady, however, said she| bring cost of the-heuse up Ge iets eee oe tee eal Bic, Sayre Saeed B= ‘Seren rocking trom the inside of his home| yiewea said their only complete |teeir hack yard many times by | the hececs erw’ae henger hee ; outers 7 ae henecgea: : ‘ | out. was tank odors which |the- odor--and-—““we-wonder if it} "cost and many families can’t "The general fepeemet, Bio cain | & Ponting Frese _surver..fe-+ said the. senell Of SCWAKE|-He-said-the septic tank emittédt seeried to be disappearing and isn't harmful to health.” aftérd them, said Colwell. Wat the Korean fighting was the | “S0@ Gal mont residents felt | OO cco Road.” . oa os oe Nearly all agreed with one | He said ‘the Hoeft road type es their Hoeft-road neighbor, John vented his five children from play right war, in the right place, at did not for the | Capehart said an investigation of |4.0 in the woman who said, “Our street [homes were “approved by about the right time with “the right) Mebby, ¢ pape tant | Hobby’s residence had born out the |"s,"" ag ON a Te THEY TRIED certainly doesn’t resemble any (every builders conference in the rec! | Friday te Wetrott betore the Sen- been in construction work ten years Tebecce Reed’ and we are con | country” and hed seals of appro- ' Adminis: won't LS the winter.” “this outfit; the ‘lucky early will be corrected.” | Two research laboratories are > in MORE 5 it. had gotten no action from the con-|| Smell same Duntiog soot tee fa) fof $5,900 and $6,700 with the un- sanitation department inspected _| struction” Company until this tame nie derstanding that thgy were buying | ‘he Yinks beiore they were cov- mnenth, . —_ unfinished homes.”’ Sawa -entd comitiens ils Mrs. Joseph Chabot of ipeg || There's no end to the num- | Hobby signed an agreement, Col-| cidents had been checked and Meet repeated some of Mebby's || Der of things you can buy i) well stated, which affirmed that corrected where possible and complaints saying “they ought to || of! Prom 1 Hetty bad the home| tice who bad not painted thett dig up one of thove veptic tanks || ine “tice way! Justtall Ml Posie te Wt "an Ia." | Fores yet had been offered enough and find out what's wrong.” 78 2-8181 and ask for an te aed Sede oe stain to carry through winter, A neighbor across the street, : ‘| tention of adding “improvements ee une See Wine bao ental n iemactve, Sache amet rea see aI = sf - « i 4 2 Ee a h mt; _ t ‘. - } = 3 1 ew % re a ee. Ae ba 2 scaiitainl saiittialaidia: a3 L saiatilaaict Peta ssi aR Ee PERS y wt of. } . —— i “sniiceiatinia ine ta ae nena aie NY SE APR NS a OE iy HG ot ee . SS. . Pee vba ‘ a eer + Adenauer Sees ~|9-Nation Talks Ending Tonight Spack Wants NATO, Stare Control LONDON # — The nine : Western foreign ministers _conferred in an atmosphere ‘of elation and optimism to- |day as agreement on West |German rearmament for | the defense of the West ap- | peared near | They met for a two-hour session this morning at his- toric Lancaster House and were to resume negotiations after lunch. In the late afternoon, U.S Sec- retary of State Dulles, British For- eign Secretary Anthony Eden, French Premier Pierre Mendes France and West German Chancel lor Konrad Adenauer arranged to confer together on the companion insue of granting West Germany complete sovereignty. Adenauer predicted the dele- gates would fintebl their task tonight. Others, notably, the French, thought the detail would ay somewhat longer te work Reflecting the ministers’ cofifié dence that an agreement was near, | Dulles advanced-his expected date Held by County Dieticians, of departure for Washington to Sat- urday night. Previously he had planned to fly home Sunday, - “It's going very well now," Ca- nadian Foreign Secretary Lester B. Pearson told newamen at the noon break. A British Foreign Ot. jand the companion talks tion to end the occupation of wud | Germany, giving the Bonn repubt virtually full control over both ex« ternal and interna] affairs. 2. The Germans then-will |@ declaration offering to proposed new seven-nation | ported today that August was the|pean alliance and the 14-natioal North Atlantic Treaty Organi« zation. : 3. Under a reported plan being worked out, the pean alliance will organize trols to be placed on the (Continued on Page 18, Col. Ty Salesman Held | in Child's Death Month’s Search With Finding of Mutilated Body. SIOUX CITY, lowa ®— a City detective said today “‘I- we have the Tight man” in abduction - slaying of & PRES aH HE EEF Fyiye ine! i i e i F 7s 7 33 £72 i § - - ; on the ; 7 nl ; <* . European — Alliance to —___-— ~~ - ~ ¢ os >: 7 ’ f a 7 4 : . , : : Ln rs 3 ies : ¥ ss Se + - ros reg d 5 e | __ THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 90,1986" 8, nec" * “Pontiac Deaths {a Sather Taste Sweepstakes [clon Mo nred Emil Mazey to Spe avd diAl Zz Fr Chief Griffith Backs 2S 52 7S cana Aas SM any Dis 22s CO Der among designers in New York./ (2 nee Anderson, 19 months, S. ded pemeiy often on Geom (Continued From Page One) Pontiac General Hospital for tace| Emil. Mazey, secretary-treasurer She is survived by several neices | 102 Tasmania St. died in St. /CiN0 Male 1 inten | thdlis, they also examined eye- and arm cuts and bruises; ‘suffered | of the UAW-CIO, will be principal and nephews, among them Fred | Joseph Mercy Hospital yesterday July 13, 1871 and lived most of her nas ams a at the - i : pos: H. Aldrich of Birmingham, Mrs. A.| after ‘a brief illness. life in M egoeel. head-on collision yesterday at | Speaker fourth oe _ L. Bogue of Farmington and Frank! Gai), born here Jan. 4, 1953, was| Mrs. Th agg ge ae by | 4# the big tray of pudding bowls! M59 and Ormond road in White quet honoring pensioned UAW-CI Lake Township, members at 5 p.m. today in Water- From Our Birmingham Bureaw large cities, with less frequency.” |C- Aldrich of Dearborn. ‘ Merry three sisters, Mrs. Andrew Hofer,|“®* set down a tester asked, de BIRMINGHAM—Fire Chiet Ver-/ Griffith asked that eredit for edi. car nani swt) srs. Ann Kornbacher and” Mrs |""What does it mean when the pud- Mills’ car collided with an cast-| id Township's CAI wilt : ab saving of ote We the Wei Th, Nab $536 Celina Fernette of Detroit; ome) ding starts sweating on top?” {bound auto driven by 3-1 leo Mennen Williname < a aro wae caw be given to the citizens reporting eves Na nt weleno a she etn brother, Ray J. of — “It means,” said the lady in the] Gould, 37, of Buttalo » je en hee = peared of Pig ae hh pag conser = i oe = in Ni ht Breakin sister Peggy, both at home. se a oy men and 4) white drese ag she set the tray prety Lia iag meg State Police | the ClO, was originally scheduled the June 14 Couper home fire.|Couper's father, Lawrence W.|'* g Service will be held Friday at) Rosary will be recited Friday |down, “that it should have been od a pean _— Mills. rapes as — calling for the establishment of an | Oo65 62, alive in the house. Had| BIRMINGHAM — ‘Tilewes. wane Be m oe. sade at 8 p.m. from the Spaulding &| covered with waxed paper.” anal Str me Pa By Persons ——— independent board to assist with |inis not been known, Griffith said | busy last night breaking into an pyre Tea nodist yy ews a Funeral Home, 500 W. Nine! Representing each of the insti-|front of ‘him, and drove into the establishment of the pension plan problems in providing “adequate |1i, men would have attacked the | auto agency and a service station, ficiating. Burial will follow in Oak | « - hse Pry oer bree tutions were Gertz, James Tal-| path of Gould's auto. Gould was|in General Mot on Oat. manpower and equipment for the tire under “strictly fire-fighting | and attempting to break into a These ITEMS Are ‘SELL-OUTS’ Everytime Chart 7 . | | Whole year.” ocr asa black and white| B. of Pontiac, nine grandchildren ; o- ao. et es Ba Extra help is needed trom bus- hound, and a redbone, but could | and two creet-grandchildren. Also 4 Because of the LOW PRICES 4 _ a ncaa Griffith | tees this year, he sald, “to meet | t hit or catch them. surviving are a brother, Henry, of $ ; > a hares a people | our share of the community's rec- Peoria, [ll.; two sisters, Mrs. Ola ; thanked the } confidence in the | 0T@-breaking goal of $186,338." Plea of- Guilty Brings Mclirath and Mrs. Scott Render of > policies of the department’ @ miaeai $ jected PER Pina 6c ANOTHER SHIPMENT to Repeat a “Sell-Out’ policies of the department during | wij. formal opening of the lo | $50 Fine, Jail Term The funeral will be held Saturday CARTON ree 4 epea — cal branch of the Automobile Qub/ BinMINGHAM — Appearing be-| ®! 1:30_p.m. from the Voorhees- > MAGNETIZED Blades 4 4 4 a said, “Department policy has al-/the club will open its doors to s . _ = ecsiacdlin ths way br fn cre bth mers, he 88S hag ang toad | sae wae me ms 11 Screw constructive and destructive criti-}on Monday morning. Bildsnte a } Incdes regula, can | a =~ ms Hunter Bivd. wit ioe ee He was fineo $50 plus $10 costs OS =— | . . | : , . : seek Come ial sae te tee Pocecesooesocescooeconesese He warned, however, the ent on oe wares: land County Jail. The jail term |} eeceseccceseneoceseos Copies a fe a rivers ing of this invest ig aes will be increased to 60 days if the |i | | piace the citizens of Birmingham Pontiac division, is a Birmingham fine is not paid a \ od $1.00 Val under a false sense of security. to residenf, Supervisor will be Mrs : mport : With Wall R | nd that ho more lives will be | Elizabeth Howell, also formerly of ; * $3.95 List Price Wet tthe city because of fre.” [the Pontiac office Trolley Riders ig ers |i. “ | . Birmingham is now 8/ The club will offer travel rout- | J P . c nearty fully populated city and| ings to its —s along with In Philadelphia we of 3 Sayles must expect incidents such as this, | information reservations on mat eget ee ag b| Hoon at Pots | Gummed Up c | Vide atthe se of the bang. PHILADELPHIA (INS) — Thellfl Gessine FEDERAL E Philadelphia Transportation Co. panel vided at the side of The Weather ° added something new to its trolley _| United Cnrch Women of Bir- today ing. Aad wat || - stone! ratn.|Mingham will hold “their second Cars y—chew gum | wage and Fridge —- Sha nh ual M tnatibute. eter ~ — stuck under | ff 1 Reatherty winds 1¢- business meet | Soar shifting te wertherty | ids ing with a i Ing at the As part of ite ‘plan to tap every] | os First Baptist Church at 10 am ule < ae the PTC Unbreakable Plastic Handles UL approved shock-proof handles. Each screwdriver blade is tempered and hard- ened. Magnetized to pick up and hold — Shape DISH PAN 16x1 '—5%4- In. Deep a eva semenuee peveing * 8 |in Michigan wil be shown by rx |tmatalled 30 penny chewing gum! ] gO VALUE First Time at This Tae Price! . + . A | Vv pad ° ‘7 . oigetion Few. - . “em eS ee oe 10 sige a = a ia “now the | , Famous ‘Mixture No. 79’ Sun vies Priday et 6.28 em office.followed by luncheon at) risers arsng the EXpeTTNCHTAT POUTe | Moon sets Thursday at 7:40 p.m 12:3 p. m. take (or rather, buy) it | e 0 acco ee -|_A talk on the work being done If ‘the idea gors ever, the PTC ry a were ae rn «| prarvall Sosmcone ee ae will puf the machines in al) of || In Tin Humidor™ Yon.. eS Be bf Gonee ——— its 1,721 streetcars and trackless | | W <. se _ — A. will be presented by trolleys, 215 subway - elevated | |f (} Sy eee Mre Raymond F. Woolfenden at| 9. ang $39 buses 138 Sise 2 p.m. Church women are urged . We@nesday in Pontiac (As recorded downtown) to attend all or part of the meet- . . | ny cmdeeee . es te ing a m m Registration Hours Snow-white Titanium enam- Mean temperature _. “ ware on steel. Easy to clean . Weather—Cioudy. Rain. $2 inch Both boys and giris may enroll Announced by Clerk dune rears mad iin, Pie rn - : poe 16-00. tm 250. size, 2.19 @ge Yeas Ags to Pontos for classes in the new YMCA craft| BLOOMFIELD _ HILLS — City|l Sink Rolled edges quaking ot to baka “Siete Wt freee and Saturday Ls J Highest temperature. ..... hd shop opening-Seturday. Starting at/ Clerk Robert Stadler has an-| | Megan ter lempereture sanannnnnen to as 9 am.. 4 classes of 45 minutes | nounced hours of registration for each will be held in simple forms | the coming November election. Mighest and Lowest TF Tomporaterce This |of woodwork, Each class will en The office will be open from in eT? Bete a Besre 31 im ie99 | Toll 12 youngsters to work on lim-| 8 a. m. through 5 p. m. through | | 98 N. Saginaw —Zad Floor SIMAS.SS.. . ited projects tomorrow, Additional hours will a = Be mchscevie 6 Bl * 6 6 be from 8 a. m. unt] noon Satur- 16 tnch mai #0 Kansss City — Sire. Ruby Yan Rensasiaer day, and from 8 a. m. to § p. m, loral hed 1 y. . Mm, ; Seeeed of tee” Ol Funeral arrangements are pend-| Monday. the final day for registra- me Ete © Re Oe ge tam esoim ff wiing at the William R. Hamilton | tion } » S New York 1 €5/Co,, Detroit, ofr Mrs. Ruby C. I a. «6 lh } a fas | Van Rensselaer, a former Birming-| World's highest active volcano SIMMS PRICE-- fo~ - 3 8 “eo ” g ham resident and prominent Detroit | is Cotopaxi, in Ecuador, which is Qa. na verse City Te 69 ' business. woman, who died yester-! 19.344 feet tall, —_—_—_—_— - -< 87: “"Perma- Siwvered” = —— life . . . Masonite covered back . hang-up rings , . floral etched band. Ideal for. bethroom, hall, HTT Pour Your Own and Save Money! 100% Pure MOTOR OIL 10-20-3040 SAE. Grade ~ Reg. $1.29 es Value —. C 2 Gallons In Factory Sealed Cans. Why ¢ ATTENTION Pon IAC MOTOR EMPLOYES of the Car Assembly Plant (Plant No. 8), unless. ee working or otherwise notified, report for work at the oe shift starting time Monday, October 4, 1954, with the ing exceptions: DEPARTMENT No. 878 AFTERNOON SHIFT repent ot regular starting time __DAY SHIFT 3.3 ula ime Wednes- | wi report of regular starting time nes- Sa ~~day, October 6, 1954, DEPARTMENT No. 887 G and H ‘Including 886 G& H, 887 GGH and 888 GGH ght aa report et 10:00 a. m., Monday, October alem. No. 025 and No. 328 Employes not eal work- will be notified when to report for work, at a later date, by | notices sent to the last address recorded in the * > seeeecee | i j 4 \ | $1.23 HOLDS =< untit” Christmas. No extra charge — low cash price. All These FEATURES: @ quart. Ideal-for sf! autos or trucks. This price for Fridey and Seturday. "acl dal Ge eae Fea ee Ideal for. Campe ora—Hunters—Fi ~~ boc! Angie Heod ‘@ High Dome Crystals —for LADIES! — for MEN! @ Fully Maker-Guaranteed A Dozen Styies at This ONE LOW, LOW PRICE! The latest and smartest watch » + « National acver- @ Dust Resistant ted bad ee fey guar- ted ‘GEO. W. WATSON, PONTIAC MOTOR DIVISION BROTHERS vent Mlle Nels Negee Sy y } * t ' f M4 ‘ * . a Se ee ae yg Oe fo eee 0 gee a ns 2 THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, ee 30, 1954 sagvd WIA0 DW Wille May's Catch, Dusty’s Homer Wins (Continued From Page One)” ed his drive straight over Willie's head in center field. It seemed impossible for Willie to catch, but he turned and ran straight for the center field bar- Players’ share: $161,648.20. Club and league share: $107,- 765.46. Federal tax: $31,738.42. City tab: $15,863.28. , Dusty Rhodes’ 10th-inning, pinch- hit home run Wednegday was the first of its kind which decided a World Series game. Thrée other pifch homers have been hit in series games—but all were delivered in a losing cause. They were Yogi Berra, Yan- kees, 1947; Johnny Mize, Yan- kees, 1952, and George Shuba, Dodgers, 1953. LOUISVILLE, Ky, (INS)—So far as the.World Series is concerned, Pee Wee Reese, Brooklyn Dodgers | meats, produce and dairy products | eve, They were positive when | they were led to the small grave. infield -star, would just as soon) play golf today as watch television, Reese shot a round yesterday | on his home Louisville course “Why should I watch the se- ries on TV?" said Pee Wee, “I it on | saw enough of the Giant's during the season when we played them 22 times.” HAVANA, Cuba (UP) — Dusty Rhodes’ home run yesterday came asa blessing to crewmen in a transport plane high. over the Gull of Mexico..- -|Cigarette Is Probable Grocery Fire Cause. Pontiac fire department officials said today they were “almost cer- tain” that a blaze in the Wrigley Supermarket at the Tel-Huron Cen- ter yesterday was started by a cigarette flipped between a wooden pen containing electrical controls and a stack of fattened cardboard boxes. : While supermarket officials could give no damage estimate they irt- dicated that the fire, which was confined to a 20-square-foot area in the basement, did little or no damage to food stocks. A Wrigley spokesman said the store would be re-opened this af ternoon after fresh supplies of | were put on the shelves While the fire was confined to the basement it sent clouds of | gondition considering her week-long smoke billowing through the first | ordeal. Doctors said she would re- sending more | cover completely than 60 employes and a floor sales area, fleeing. Pair Sees Newborn Baby Perish on Isolated Mount Robbers Wife ~BURLINGTON, Vt. (INS) — A young Massachusetts couple today tragically told of the Unattended birth, death and burial of their first-born dadghter—high on the slopes of Camel Hump Mountain and miles from the nearest shelter. Mrs. Margaret Bartch, 19, of Wol- laston, Mass. gave birth to the and walking at the Fletcher Hospital. . had. walked . fordr the mountain to find a Montreal-to-Burlington bus and that her husband had not accompanied her because she had only a little change left—not enough for her fare. But when the 30-mile trip north was made and Bartch was still at the cabin, police began to be- HE The mother was in remarkable But the couple is temporarily parted, for Bartch was taken to Prive Regular 98c Sq. Yd. Linoleum We are closing out our stock of felt base linoleum in 9 and 12-foot widths. Save Now! Vinyl upke Ken Flor The perfect tile for long wear with easy Does not require scrubbing, can be instal ied on any floor. Tile 11N. PERRY ST. Full 9x9 C Regular 2lIc Each Armstrong Quaker Wall Covering ; Regular . ¢ : — : =e ++ Lin. Ft. —-ag £2 tpt . With Miracle K-99 Finish! Plastic Wall fee LEAT Fivé Delaxe lal Colors— TL Contour Bevel— ~ Gleaming Finish . << | T ® CARPETS * DRAPERIES ® TILE © WINDOW SHADES Mie Condos” Pontiac’s Oldest Locally Owned Floor ‘Covering Firm! Washington County Jail at Mont. | pelier and heid charge until an investigation is completed. | Paul once worked part-time as barr orderly, on a. Vvagrancy Nabbed by FBI Mrs. Cox ts Charged With Possessing Stolen igan student. drew a l3-year sen Money Mra Juanita Cox, 20, of Pontiac | evieted | because | |} wife of bank robber Hugh Cox arrested by FBI agents | Wednesday on a charge of receiv sake }ing and possessing part of the body of the poy was dug | $52,300 taken by her husbs and and | State Path- | , companion in an April 2 Dear- Spelman for aN | born holdup The girl, a housemald here who Fur seals can dive mere than! lives at 831 Inglewood Ave., is their search for food. tree en _$1.000 poreenat bend to- | Was peading..cxaminatioa#’ Ort 20 + lo pay oar Federal — io in prison for the pobbery of | the Telegraph-Cartisie. branch of | the Manufacturers His accomplice National Bank James J der, M4, former University of Mich tence George E. Woods, chief assist j;ant US. district attorney that Mrs. Cox purchased a $3,000 | armament car with some of the money from | hands of NATO | Cre robbery ‘Granade Kills 5 Children IMZIT, Turkey aes, School | |children were killed and j seriously injured yesterday = n a hand grenade they had found |exploded a as they played with it. Her husband was s« mnitenc ed to 15] ‘Agreement Near on Rearming Bonn (Continued From Page One) Hrimain, France, Tialy, West Ger many, Betgium, and Luxembourg 1. The administration of these | | controls the Netherlands t | years The trolled by. thé proposed seven-nae jen alliance. The Germans have | been pushing fog its adsiinistra- ] Min | and armaments of member nations | ferees apparently were” broken primarily designed to | said | prevent any riinaway German re-|to kee p its men in Europe tion by the 15-nation Council of I urope The differences between the com ‘through yesterday by a tradition. shattering British pledge of mili- tary support on the contineng for | the proposed European allianee, Canada followed with a pledge French want it Gotie— jsources said French Premier Pi to discuss the future of the dis | puted Saar with Adenauer after the present conference ends, French would be in the One obstacle to agreemem ap |peared cleared when French | he rre Mendes-France is now willing for European defense But if no Dulles The Saar question hag deviled - German | Pelations for | os the continent. U.S. Secretary of State Dulles said if the conference could agree on ‘a system of European unity, would: recommend that the ts Uniifed States promise to maintain its full shere of the forces needed reemem is reached, bc the Ynited States may have to pail its troops from ~ FRIDAY --- SATURDAY --- 2 DAYS ONLY! BARNETT’S MONTH-END a * ot Te. 5 es “4 a yrs Our Monthly Clean-up of Odds and Ends and Broken Ranges . . . Truly “Give-away Bargains” in new goods bought this season ... every item is first quality . .. highty desirable; .. but not all sizes. All Terrific Values! SEE HOW YOU SAVE! Just 12 of Our $29.75 “Water Repellent’ Gabardine Topcoats Broken ranges. If your style is here you get a steal eat this give-awey price! Come early! ‘15 WHILE THEY LAST SEE HOW YOU SAVE! Crease-Resistant Gabardine SUITS ’ just 14 left of these fine gabardines. A tare value at this low price! Just 14 of Our $37.50 25 WHILE THEY LAST LOOK! GET YOURS NOW FOR ‘FALL! LOOK! BE SURE TO SEE THESE! Siced 27 of Our $40 Soconts oo a ee —some shorts and longs. A Terrific Value ot Only . ‘2S WHILE THEY LAST All YEAR ‘ROUND WEIGHT Hard Finish Sharkskin SUITS BROKEN — Crease-resistant, weight, hard finish All New This Season Just 62 eof Our $42.50 “28 SEE HOW YOU SAVE! COME EARLY! Just 82 of Our $50 Fine Tweed Topcoats These are very choice. pal ene salad the lonett tweeds . kind be proud to weer deta to see them! ‘38 ‘ele shades. SUITS Single and double-breasteds In new Every one a dg seller this season, Most sizes Just 41 of Our $50 ‘38 BARGAINS IN JACKETS! Just 33—-$7.95 Fall Jackets Just 24—$12.95 Quilted Lined Gabardines .. BARGAINS IN SLACKS! 29-—$7.95 GABARDINE SLACKS. ... 33—$10.00 FALL SLACKS 39—$13.50 NASSAU FLANNELS. . .. eevee ewee COME EARLY! SAVE! : $6.95 LONG SLEEVE 100% \Orlon Sweaters +. 95 SLEEVELESS 100% Orlon Sweaters COME EARLY! SAVE! 85¢ Famous Brand Sox sss: $1.35 100% Nylon-Shorts .....:.. $6.50 ARROW GABARDINE SHIRTS We Repeat --- Buy Now While You Can Save So Much! You'll Never Forgive A Close-Out! “eges - FE 4-2531 - Meourselt It You Miss These Great Savings! Get In Early! 2 pene: pH ee tN C IAU JNVE MIDDLETOWN, Conn. (UP) — Wrong Abbott, Costello Abbott and Costelio were patients Memorial iteapita. However, it _. the famous comedy team. The patients were Timothy Ab- bott, 6, and William. Costello, 6. ney tas es wey | Poach Under Arrest FORT WORTH, Tex THE PONTIAC PRESS, THU "RSDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 1954 ing-hienl atthe same corner every morning and following him as ‘he (UP) | made his rounds on his-motorcycie. Patrolman Jack Eagle finally ' got | Eagle * ‘arrested’ the dog and took tired of a brown shaggy dog meet- 18 te ihe pound, o> Se $4 + 5 CUBIC , ic: 50 T ite PRICE 99 95 ELECTRI Cn? Pe, FOOT HOME FREEZERS ZERS REDUCED fe QoX' LATEST MODEL SUPER DELUXE 22 CUBIC FOOT fav’ °399" Only SERVEL has amazing “Cold-Seal” construction Cotd-tightt No outside sweating’ Pneumatic gaskets’ Lock-seom interiors! Hermetically-sealed Power- 5-year worranty'! 4-inch compressed ‘‘Cold Barrier’ insulation! cold electric unit—extro quiet! See Today's Greatest Freezer Values at . . Phone / 141 EAST MAIN WALLED LAKE They're air-tight! MA 4-1722 +-water pan is empty and he wants a ye OM, CHUCKS—Five-year-old Bilt Pecha. of Eau Claire, Wis., sits on his front porch, with his pet weodchuck, “Woodie.” The Pechas | | got Woodie as a cub from the farm of a relative. While tiny, he | was fed from a doll’s: milk bottle Now three menths old, he has acquired a taste for toast with jelly on it. cereals and nuts. if-his | drink. hell scratch on the deor until he gets service * Bob Considine Says: Latest Serum Would Put —- U.S. in Pink-Colored Daze NEW YORK (INS) — Medical. mate tragedy that could over- | science has come up with a serum) take the United States if the } which, when injected into the hide! serum was taken daily by every | of a frustrated and worry-rac ked | citizen, | Person, will — ave Se pied, If we had nothing to worry | son a feeling of we ME Ne! about, and our focus was blurred | first class optimism | as to the nature of the dangers | The injected person is said ami responsibilities around we. develop a sudden love for his or| we'd go to pot faster than if we her enemies. All the gnawing/ were hit simultaneously with a pangs of suspicion, jealousy, doubt | thousand H-bombs and fear disappear. Let’s hope we) A completely contented America car. find some way to keep the|j, 9 pretty appalling thought to| stuff from becoming generally} pring before the mind's eye j used Newspapers would perish begin- | Characteristically, the serum [ning with the advice to the love- le extracted from sn@ke venom. it takes no great stretch of the imagination to picture the atts. lorn columns. Department stores would collapse, fer ne one would care any longer to join in the bat- WORK OXFORDS i ; . r. | Oil and heat-resistant Neoprene soles —_—_—_—_— th e of the bargain basement. The automobile industry would shut its gates. Everybody would be con- tent with last year's car and be too blissful to covet the new | models with the streamlined all trays No one, of course, would join | the armed forces, since no dis- | and work would be stopped on | the Alr Force Academy. | Willie Mays would refuse to swing on a fat one offered by Early Wynn, on the ground that Wynn is shoe values now! a. fine fellow—so why should be | now try to hurt him Buy in the Rocky” Marciano’s fights would big sale! go the l5-round distance, inas- much as no blows would be landed and the activity confined-to esthet- ic shadow-boxing All research, except in the field of perfecting more comfortable hammocks, would end in an_in- vs MARK DAVIS | CAMERA MART - OFFERS-.- @ EASIEST TERMS © LOW DOWN PAY'T. * ®NO INTEREST @ BEST VALUES! You can own this world famous camera with a small down pay- WORLD FAMOUS 2 oo $442, = We also have in stock the f1.5 Surmmarit tens, the famous tt f and Il! f cameras. SEE THE M-3 AT THE CAMERA MART TODAY! Brand new com- pletely cutomatic model with 3.5 Tessor fens | 2.8¢ Model with super fast 28 Xenatar lens CHARGE IT TODAY WEEK’S SENSATION RETINA IIA Kodak's Outstanding Value Camera! NOW ONLY sg. Only 99.00 Friday and Saturday only. ; No need to .put out all your cash for a so-called DEAL when you can SAVE MONEY and still CHARGE IT. pay easy terms with no interest of Carrying charges PRICE CUT '2 Nationally popular DO-IT-UR-SELF Paint Sets. Many . beautiful scenes to choose from. CRAFTMASTER PAINT SETS NOW ONLY 1.25 Regular Price $2.50 Just follow the numbers for 3 beautiful hand made oil paintings THIS WEEK’S On your feet all day? These shoes are scien- checked, causing no alarm. tifically designed to give you years of com- Schools, churches__and hospitals ~——fortt Here's why: Foam rubber insoles cushion : - id be La your feet with thousands of tiny air cells; sir sted a = oe ee Nylon - stitched -water - proofed uppers. Neoprene soles and heels resist.oil and grease. Brown. 6-13, B-C-D-EEEE.-Hurry! High-style cushion insole work shoes. About the only industry remain- ing in the country would be the cal manufacture of plowshares at Oak | | Ridge, Tenn. Los Alamos, Noy and Hanford, Wash. Streets would sound incessantly to. the “Happy Days Are Here Big savings for you on ever-pop- ular saddle oxfords! Genuine leather uppers with white soles. Choose from brown or black and- white ip sizes 4 to 9. Hurry te prea iee, citer SAGINAW AT _OPEN MON. FRI Hurry blue or leather stippers with beaded vamps f and padded soles. Fur trimmed in | | and 4 to 9. Hurry to Federal’s now and save on this special value! And when the junk wore off we | — that all the street signs | were printed in Russian, and. big | f | brother was watching. | ; | L j W | for savings on these soft | rl Rake Produces Ring NORWALK, Conn. (UP)—Mrs. Harry DeWeil got her wedding ring back after losing it 18 years ago at a birthday party. A church organist who moved into her va- cated home discovered her initialed ring while raking the yard. red. Sizes 6 to 12, 13 to 3 KODAK “35” Kodak's famous 35mm camera with ¢ 3.5 lens, coupled rangefinder, double ex- posure prevention and leather carrying case. Full price this week only $39.50, Onty-2-in- stock. — ‘STEREO-REALIST LEADING THE —” hdr © $3.5 Matched Lens © Coupléd Ratge Finder, ~~ ® Double Exposure Proof REAL LIFE ae PICTURES YOURS FOR . ONLY * 590 DOWN va WARREN PONTIAC ent } m Cameras 4re Our Business—Not a Sidetine? SAT. NIGHTS TO9 [var 83 N. Saginaw St. FE 4.4343 fo sa ni en Ae eae . ve ‘ oy : ‘* t Jee ‘ * ¢ ¢ ‘ — oJ THE. PONTIAC PRESS, TILURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 1954 : f y t l ’ m7 . ed } 4 ‘ - Feiss ; - 2 ? % 4 ; : 2 ba 4 . olVG GIA VW es Lo sna ; ad -STX ies = % _— as : = : \ fs - : * e Tt Arena Pry ee ew M . ee "4 A area see . Y ; x — STARTING. eel | - |Masculine ; , | Tweeds Get |) i \ ce S Cc Le ie Compliment |” | But They'll Show! a : Irregularities in a, ; Womans Skin / i This fall's magnificent tweeds | { plubbed or nubbed, bright or som BS ber, hairy or Smooth, color-flecked FR or unflecked—will need adding ma j a: chines to keep tab of all the com. | fe pliments they're going to get = 3 ge Just the same. this is a mascu Bx line - type fabrme whose rough 5 3 speckled and often harsh of Nairy a surface tends to highlight any ie + — La regularities—especially sallowness c of a womans skin 4 Therefore, the makeup for g " this strong fabric must go. all out te wake the lady tweed wearer's shin took feminine and | STARRING — JANE WYMAN *® ROCK HUDSON finished. 4 = What is advised? i 7 z . By all means, wear a tinted | : . {Prake-tip—founcation —Chuase —atet— Z 7 use it for enlivening skin Color and s t ; glow, not for the thickness of its ELEGAN( FE! os ae oe ft soe ee Phete | coating, To veil anyvor all hitthe + i £ . Wrs. Walter A. Kleinert of Bir mingham, | B.C. Fhe bison is part of a group of pottery | faws, bring skin tones fron hair i general chairman of the antique show being | which was excavated in Persia. Third and tins to an after-five neckline fhito| & een — =: iu 1 l P I } » | 9 Th one uniform tone to wrpart .an ‘ “ | sponsored by Piety Hill Chapter DAR, is) 12th century pieces are — display. The} impeccable finish all you need to Mrs, Charles Harmon Jr. of Peach street is pictured padmiring a prehistoric piece of pottery in| show will be held Sept. 29, 30 and Oct, 1 Si Misa Lili as sheer as the deck of the Holland-American Liner “SS Ryndam,” | the form of a bison which dates bach to to 1500 and 2 in the Birmingham C fraliatt House. Choose a cake-type makeup | She)sailed recently from New York harbor to Geissen, Gere ' foundation, if your skin is normal! many where she will join her husband who ts stationed there or inclined to oiliness. a cream Slate TT eaching Tots to Swim Takes Patience bye, Ve yin eed i Soumsiation that | en ees ee Sats A ee will ally dryness me give you 4 It's a good idea for every child| himself wants to dabble in the|self. Let your child enjoy himself | seft satin finish Here are mon ( , ld L Wj l] St ll to learn how to swim. Expose | water the way he likes. Yoo! only do] UPs 0 en egs ] TO ae ; your child to some water (besides| With some children it takes a . ; , In foundation shades assis the ' . , . to eee” 95 the bathtub) if you possibly can. long time. They may never get harm by forcing —him “inte the that are too brown. too bein = Down Paris Boulevards e Before anyone can learn to swim | wet above the waist for a whole |‘ @te! too drab-making Thumbs ar: : ms j he must feel easy and comfortable | summer, but eventually even a Next time maybe he will Be in| down on fou pink shades ocd, PARIS ‘iINS) Parts fashions ; news for girls who go in for lux jin the water. Fear is the greatest|timid child will discover it's fun] a little further, if he doesn't have | are too strong to take any spun. { are back on the gold standard ury of @ less private character Sizes 10%4-11 | drawback in getting your feet off}to: wade out into water up to his|a memory of a fright to get over} sugar effects in mak up Women will wear stockings .e |} The latest atecking is buttoned, $1.00 Higher " * | the bottom, armpits. Then is your time to] If your child is quite young you Wear rouge. Here is one of the | inforced with real gold, ‘cause Pale peach-volored Fath heos- | You almost never go to a pub-|start teaching him strokes. have plenty of time. most feminine aids a woman can | Jacques Fath is out to make wom tery comre with tiny black bel- Your new fall pumps from Diem’s are prctijoiir arent nig tan ee It’s likety to be pretty frustrat- However if your child is getting or eae eg aah the dull texture pee = eal Mabe tous _ . tons on 0 full-length seam on A so elegantly flatter th glitt ln TC : ral colering of tweed pachieve U teen ern ence aa the outer side Of the leg. iti ig Ninh Slag screaming, Clutching child into tre img, when fhe hated = = — = ere eee bee en ee r . on stockings, ar to be exact, on ——— i thinestones, exquisite embroidery and wale is a single day's expecition. You | iittle chance to go swimming Fer another feminine ally. | gickine t 1 One stocking model has its but exciting decors. Brown or black . went to a lot of effort te get the give him a few lessens (perhaps don't furget what a velveted The 1 ate . Paris sensation pre-liening in a straight-line. while an calt and bleck suede in Grecetul There ts ne better way © pre kids to the beach and you know ata YMCA er a ¥WOA) you fitm of frdeh face powdrr can do. | pared by Fath ton tashtotiable _ th « heel heights. Sizés 5 to 11, AAA-C | Vent a youngster from learning | it won't be possible again for a | possibly can. Best ti : women and theig hushancds ge eee eee ee ee S to swim than by forcing him | long time, ' ; patu'k shade fur Not. 2) - a reord dacing between two rows of : } : Under the guidance of a good|and 3 fall favovits : ' stockings with the inch top band : into the water when he is afraid, : ~ aray, Hoge tiny buttons You only increase his fear. You so much want them to enjoy|teacher and with a = group.of Jand black and White mixture, feinforced by pure gold thread _ = d . swimmiiig as you do. You just| youngsters of ‘about his own Lge |tweeds — is a redas Lory we-the {the finest in the world , + Fath duit! - —_— It's a whole = better to go to|can't bear to see all the beautiful | many: a child will learn to swim | costume is ° ; are Fath dolbnats , . } yac costume is ‘cool We ore oO n olde Poh " 2 “The Best Friend Your Foct Ever Had’ _ |len'vas'nnrens "Ux s'pfene |g’ weg tua ea ore a a emt | te Sam te ace |i ery eran teh 12 W. Huron. FE 2-2492 | ster play on the shore, dig in the | more than the toes wet. Most children are a little timid] jo, evening twee ae slat af 6 Rand, ans Gay Seapen . . + Ee g tweeds feet of @ super tuxurious ma velvet or satin _ : “sand if there ts sand—until he! You'd better just hold onto your- when they first approach water Fer the paitte pink, htacs and) tertal. An added attraction —lor ee honey-toned and other tweeds as | the husband only—is a diamond Some cut to cover a — breakfast trimmed geben gertertty Sheer thers, flatter, —_-* ' "| small pancakes, sit on top ef the get out your lipsticks in exattly Fath claims he took six months cad en . waned & re e matching or closely-allied shadks (to perfect this new, deluxe acers ‘os — vl = if No ; ul e to — ~ vm ory. le is now working on the wana os Color experts claim yellow has) abe id stocking for the future Fath's smartest doll-hat is a pill i P the highest rating fr general visi- | \But that's not all) Monsieur Fath| box of 4inch diameter designed a G o * $ bility jalo has more visible stocking ' to sit on a ehignon = ood Living ae Remember! In Pontiac - - It's Rappy s ‘ “ y "TRIED ON” FOR SIZE Bes generally believed that the softness _-of_.a—-chair's seat, alone, determines the degree‘of comfort it will afford you. Fact is, the pitch of the seat and bock — the ONLY AT OUR STORES can you have this de th de nd its height smart imported chair individualized, color- WE LIKE GOOD LEATHER because it acquires @ patina, pin o ' e seat a ts eigh aa hat ce keyed to your setting, with genuine leather or i ee a, comfort foctors. A chair that will lull an Vicrtex seat. Amazingly comtortable, the seat this chair, in a wide range of colors, from dark fones, overage size person to sleep may, to a Six- is foam rubber, the molded back available in , footer. be somewhat | fortable than - through bright ones—some stels. Spring seat con- er, $s at tess comfortable ie] birch or walnut. A godd occasional chair—ideal e & oo 8 te block. And for den or TV room. With tweed textured seat, Struction, as found in most of the durable feather chairs 2 eres DN, vice-versa $29.50. With leather or Vicrtex $33.00 that seem to last @ life time. © $169 50 ‘ ° Hines our commercial: — Becouse we = Operate our own exclusive cusfom workshop right here in Detroit, you can “try on” ond — select from mony, many chairs and sofos— —— r enjoy seating comfort that’ 7 ored to rf needs. -With more than a quorter of a easton of fine furniture manu- facturing experience behind us, it’s a simple matter for us to vary widths, depths, pitches, LADIES’ LOUNGE CHAIR is small scale. has héights, to provide foom rubber or spring foam rubber seat. Would took welt in one of ROCKING LOUNGE CHAIR has neat appearance of construction—to your individual needs. _Our new linen covers—dyed to match your "traditional lounge chair. Full“ftem rubber seat, kick “eotor scheme. . From $140.00 pleats, button back, graceful arms. From $164.50 , . + = I O provide a still wider choice for you, _ we also handle pieces. .by such notionolly. = 2 oeoee ft known manufacturers as Widdicomb and ee Heritage Henredon—which we consider to be among the finest. And naturally, you won't find dozens of chairs exactly like your a ae Warm and Wonderful... own when you order from us — since you ’ -_ select from hundreds of fabrics, leathers, Fleece Coats by MARKETTE or luxury grade plastics. (Incidentally, we : __@p.Advertised in Seventeen — do custom re-upholssery work, too.) Foshion-sright styling combines with @ double lining of fomovs MILIUM® plus quilthd MICROLITE* fiber gloss to moke these the perfect all-occasion coats. ‘ ~ = ; ae ds. em NEE Ce L met ~~ LEFT, Brilliant os @ hunting costume — this double breasted coat with peorl buttons repeated on beautifully + “TRIM” TRADITIONAL CHAIR is available as FRENCH PROVINCIAL LOUNGE CHAIR: has exposed Soni t is let | detailed bock belt. RIGHT: Jewel-encrusted collor casts its mogie spéll of sheer flottery on this raglan , man's or lady's lounge chair. Frill-less and frame available in fruitwood, or any finish you may m at al! our stores 's — é sleeve coat, Both in Junior sizes 7-15. A full range of luscious colors. Each : straight forward, it has foam rubber seat cush- desire. Very attractive in a print; @ bit more formal You're more than welcome to come in and ‘Matching hots And every coat comes with its own FREE brush. , $ 00 | ton. Choose from many fabrics. From $159.00 in velvet, : From $199.00 just “look around.” neg. TM @ Mitiom te the registered tredemert of Deering, Milliken @ Co., Ine. for metel-ineuistad fabrics. : : - - 7 One Style $49.95 rarer A PLEASANT STORE TO CAN ROOMS — aso foil for ‘ SERVE You | modern—for parents of small children who-like to - . iy | be rocked to slbeg,.. Wits eutiuasnls: Resting Sian - Birmingham—s. Adams Near Lincoln Charge | has simple, rugged beauty. In block, with gay ) Midwest 4-8834 ae : stencil design. (Also available in a child’s size _ . ; ‘ ; ot $14.50) $27.50 | : --OPEN “TIL 9 MONDAY, THURSDAY, FRIDAY EVENINGS _ NATIONAL pba * - ‘ oe | > : 7 vas : . SUDGET TERMS AVAILABLE : : : CLOTHING — ‘at No * A aa : . 9 South Saginaw St. tee Extra ost. ', _ — = — -~ * 8. pn = — x = ‘ tlh pe — en - oe ee wr \ ; a one - . - ae ~ a — * =" ; . eae = i mie , IN utritiots Liver Achieves Gry kanes wm New Zest With Oranges Wonderful liver deserves a very|or bacon, byt for a different, truly | special treat, combine it with poached orange slices garnished : - value, but for goodness. af flavor | with bits of crumbled bacon. This ‘member that the favor is best if and versatility as well. [makes an attractive as well -as = This tender meat combines well | delicious main course ___ with auch olf feverites G5 GMSES) sce cngglice of callie nse | coming te market make beet liver an exceptionally good value | at this time, though perk, lamb, | weal and calves liver are also in good supply. But whichever type of liver you choose, you'll be .sure of bonus | amounts of vitamins, minerals and | high quality proteins so necessary | to health and well being. Liver is a delicate meat that re |quires constant- refrigeration. If special place in your menu plan- ‘ning, not only for it® High nutritive loosely and keep it-in the coldest | | within 24 hours of purchase. | part of your refrigerator and use | THE PONTIAC PRESS. THU RSDAY. ‘ THYME ‘°N' ORANGE LIVER—Pictured here is a liver dish jyou purchase fresh liver, wrap It! tarant and savory with a delicate touch of thyme. The fruit favor from the sliced oranges combines admirably with the meaty goodness For contrast, crisp bits of bacon are added of the liver SEPTEMBER 30, 1954, Scalloped Potatoes Are Baked Whole A different version of scalloped potatoes leaves them whole, bakes them in a flavorful milk sauce, and ends with a smooth creamy pro duct. : Baked Cream Potatoes 2 pounds new potatoes 2‘) cups milk % cup melted butter ty teaspoon salt %» cup siiced onion % cup four Few grains pepper Wash and peel potatoes. Place dish. Combine milk, butter, salt and onion. Pour over potatoes. Cover baking dish; bake te moderate oven (358) for 1% hours or until potatees are fender. Remove any filmi that forms during baking. Rémove potatoes. Add flour mixed to a smooth paste «| in_cold water; cook until thickened. {. SWIFTNING. 3 Lb. Can ' _! ] ' 1 ' ' Cwm ' 4 t 4 we “Reserve “tight To Limit Quantities | Frosen liver should be kept frosen until ready te use, and then thawed in the refrigerator or according te the directions on the package, A well-known brand | game.is your best guidé te qual- Because there ts very tittle Waste i te fiver, you may count on four geod seryings per pound. |pare and lends its goodness to a) ing, parboiling or precooking if you | However, if you plan to grind the | liver for patties or liver loaf, it directs Thyme ‘N’Orange Liver 4 slices bacon, ehonpes 1 pound Bee! liver, sliced } 2 babiespouns fiacur 1 teaspoon powdered thyme | %e teaepoen pepper 1 teaspoon salt 3 oranges, peried and siiced | bent paper Pour off att except 2 Haney Sweet Peas {7 t minutes. Makes four servings Bg ewan fA=-4 Mushroom Stulfing Peps Up Tomatoes Once’ a year—during the height | dulge-in the riotous use of fresh | tomatoes. Stuffing them with a va- fAety of fillings is a way to sur- prise your family Try mushroom-stuffed tomatoes. For eight large, firm tomatoes— | tops sliced off and centers scooped out—make filling as follows Fry one-third cup chopped ba- | - VA HOWARD STREET| FOOD MARKET 148 Howard St. at Perry St. Free Parking in Our Large Parking Lot Next io Store Blend with 1 quart of toasted one- half-inch bread cubes and add 1 can of condensed mushroom soup. Stuff tomato shellg with the! mushroom mixture. Top each with one-half tablespoon gfated Parme- isan—-eheese. Bake at 305 degrees 'for 30 minutes From the world-famous Fern Kennels— A NEW TASTE SENSATION IN CANNED DOG FOOD! ‘ & Prades of Generel Foods How your dog will love Gaines’ great new canned dog food! And Gaines assures your dog of every food factor that Gaines scientists find mecessary for bounding energy and vital health from head to tail! ity when choosing frozen liver. | Liver is an easy meat to pre} lvariety of tempting dishes. Re- | f }member that liver need no soak- | plan to broil, pan-fry or braise it. | | should be pre-cooked as the recipe | Pay-fry bacon. Drain on absor- | {tablespoons drippings. Co m bine . | ons thyme, salt and pepper. Dip | lliver slices in the flour mixture. | C Phillips Cut Green Beans Brown liver on both sides in the | Red Rese Kidney Beans } bacon drippings. Add oranges. Cov- j a Phillips Tomat | > er, Cook over low “heat for (15 |of thé tomatd season—you can in-| lcon and in the drippings ont 1 tablespoon finely chopped onion | and one-fourth cup chopped celery r Jelly-making reminders — ¢ | j } ! Cake Mix . Sess" . ’ Squeez-| cloudineigs may be removed by Season with pepper. | ing or pressing the jelly bag causes | straining the juice through a fresh | Juice to be cloudy. Some of the | bag. BW Harves Serves four Add potatoes; heat. hed six. oe } Tie win cman sre Seal to sefve with fruit juice, soups, salads and cocktails. bee Sar ttn a) sae oe a THIRTY-W NINE _ ously, on top of bread in lightly buttered 2-quart baking —TRIENTAL Suow-YoOu HH « taint City, Ind, E FULL WEEK 10 SHOP THIS. eS — v<77eage A® . ~ ow (Y'* -_ a B Pillsbury Angel Food Mix...... 49° Pilsbury Pie Crust Mix .. Piss. 27° TIDE LARGE 6 OZ. MAXWELL = Armour's Cloverbloom Grade A Large EGGS White or Colored nn 29° Recdpee et og: Shank Half 49* » Kingan's No. 1 Traypack ° BACON... Rib End Pork Loin 3 Gg or Boston 7 eee Huron Friendly Market SELLS ONLY U. S. Prime Grade Steaks -- Roasts -- Ground Beef Whole. 10 to 14 &. avg. = Michigan U. S$. No. 1 Duncan Hines FAN TAIL SHRIMP... 10 Ox. Pkg. C If you'd like to see what a real meaty aroma can do to your dog's appetite, just slide a dish of Gaines Canned Dog Food under his nose at his next feeding. When he gets a taste of it—and * when you see what it cai do for him—both of you will become Gaines boosters for life! wikgag Be i Eee: b: ae £4 +f Fs E 28 & . o 3 » ? « * -.. : + a See (2 y an a SS. _POR THE VITAL HEALTH OF Your DOG! = Ae ‘ Peet: | . The 7 Minute | Macaroni’ and Cheese Dinner Potatoes 9" idaho U. S. No.1 Baking U. S. Prime—Blade Cut Friendly Market 884 WEST HURON STREET gr ee NE Fe al mee era b eee Se SC -of 10-15 Cents by ‘55: { j 4e around 26 per cent. The law of ps sgn and demand wil rom mm furtherd”’ A prices tarted up last De-| cember and then took another NEW YORK (UP)—The Ameri- | *Purt in the spring can housewife will pay 10 to 15| Within the past six weeks, price | cents less for a pound of coffee | cuts have shaved off some 4 per | before the end of this year, in-|cent of the fhcrease which sent | dustry sources predicted today. cofiee as high as $1.45 a ane “Prices must go down because —_— we haye more coffee available now! Alligators and caymans are dis- | than we had a year ago,” OMe |tinguished from crocodiles by | leading coffee roaster said having shorter, blunter jaws, and | “Consumer _vesistance this | they are considered to be less ac- i year has cut coffee consumption | tive and vicious | WALLPAPER, FACTORY _OUTLE 105 N. SAGINAW ST. WALLPAPER’ §f Bo = 9 = 19° = 29° Bi | —TRIMMED FREE— PAINT FOR EVERY PURPOSE !m Unpainted Furniture. Glidden's Spred Satin meer Coffee Drop. o” 5 \ ’ | -©L08EUP—Tiny-camera thal can be attached to | Frankfurt, Germany. It is fitted with an 56 lens } eyeglasses is . demonstrated at International Fair in and uses iémm aim. eo ——————— ALWAYS FIRST QUALITY! Smart new fashion ... plus the comfort of Milium® lining! Park in City Parking Lot, E. Pike St—5e an Hour 39° Left— dust-to-the-hip length with a classic airl Cas- ually designed in the fin- est wool chinchilla, this double - breasted beauty has the neat belt-in-the- back. touch, slim slash pockets, generous club collar. Choose red, roy- al, navy, beige, Gr pea- cock. Sizes 8 to 18. 2 Ais Left— Fashion’s superlative fabric story told so perfectly at Penney’s! Here, the finest all wool chinchilla interpreted into the smartest new winter coats, extra special in detailing, outstanding in the advance styling of fashion. And—a comfort plus—they’re Milium® lined to assure you of never a cold moment this winter. Choose from red, royal blue, grey, navy, peacock, blue, beige. Misses’ sizes 8 to 18. _THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 90. 1054 mak uviA PA dak Dre" We Give HOLDENS RED STAMPS / Vs 1,44 Yankees Scalp Prices!) Reg. $9.95 Saf-T-Baeé , é Giants Scalp Indians! Water-Repellent DUCK HUNTE COATS | with waterproof game . | Repellent Reg. $7. 95 DUCK HUNTING |' PANTS S 4” I rom pockets Boys’ Reg. $11.95 Water Repellent a tC SUR-COAT Gabardine With Mouton Collar and Warm quilted lining NOW ONLY $=99| eae _ Boys’ or Girls’ 100% Wool VARSITY JACKETS Boys’ Vinyl LEATHER Won't scuff or tear, fade and woter- proof. Wipes clean with a damp cloth. It's New! It's Rugged JACKET 4 In Assorted School Colors! Quilted 39 e rerica tie ser toe Famous Moke Reg. $2.95 GLYCOL BASE PERMANENT Anti-Freeze 1 One Big Group MEN’S WARM WINTER JACKET 5 Hundreds of Styles-- Alt With Warm _ Linings Don't Miss This Chance All Steel LEAF ne \ a ” » frontage trom commercial to light q Sizes 4-12 Zipper Fly Open Thursdey end Friday “a8 P.M. 320 Mein OL 2-0811 $437 | Uae. a rk. a ne ‘cee SN South Lyon Readies for Harvest Festival SOUTH LYON — Last minute | preparations for-a 3day Harvest Jamboree, to be held tonight; Fri- day and Saturday, are under way The festive affair, sponsored by Lovewell-Hill Post 2502, VFW, will take place at the intersection of Lafayette and Main Sts., here. Democratic candidate for the lieutenant governor post Philip A. Hart will lead the main event of the jamboree. a parade to begin at 10 a.m. Saturday. He is sub- stituting for Gov. G. Mennen Wil- liaras. Bands from South Lyon High School, Highland, Milford, Walled Lake, Northville and Ann Arbor will take part in the procession. Other sections will include heavy equipment by Pontiac Division of the National Guard, Oakland Coun- ty Sheriff's Department mounted division, horses and floats Contests for iiidren and teen- agers will be staged Saturday aft- ernoon, and at 9 p.m. the winner of the giris’ popularity contest will _| be given a $30 award. Specifies Size for Interceptor Minimum 15-inch Pipe Ordered for Tienken Road Subdivision cil committee hag decided area at Tienken and Rochester Rds. are not of sufficient capacity to serve the development. They have recommended a mini- mum 15-inch sanitary sewer in- terceptor be constructed, in ac- cordance with plans submitted to the village council by McMahon Engineering Co. This would be a 3,720-foot line, costing an estimated Counciimen John Dahimann, Frank Rewold, 8, Q. Ennis, Vil- lage Atorney Roscoe Martin, and Village Manager Kobert A. Sione comprised the committee. has proclaimed Oct. 23 as United States Day for the display of the national and state flags, and Oct. 24 ag United Nationg Day in anni- versary of the founding of U. N Doyle Wilson and George Carey, owners of the Rochester Elevator at East Fifth and Water streets, asked the council if they might lease a space on the East street parking lot for a temporary stor- age building. The matter was taken under advisement. Manager Slone reminded the council that money is in\the budget to com- plete the seal coat of the Ist. high school was approved, Several new stop streets \were created in the aréa. including a four way stop at Wilcox and Wogt Fourth street The giant redwoods in north Cal- ifornia reach a height up to 340 feet. ROCHESTER — A village coun. | that, sewer interceptors near the pro-| posed subdivision and shopping, Village president Clarence Burr | THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 1955 Rochester Acts on Sewage Problem 4 WALLED LAKE—Patricia Rose Messer became the bride of LA, Lynnwood Oliver Bowers Brafich ’ Jr. Saturday in an 11 a.m, cere mony at Our Lady of Refuge | Church, Orchard Lake, | The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. George P. Messer of Walled Lake Mr. and Mra. L. O. B. Branch of Virginia Beach, Virginia, are the parents of the bridegroom. A candlelight satia gown trimmed with seeded prearis, with a bouffant skirt flowing into a long train was the bride's choice for the ceremony. She wore. a crown of seeded pearis with a silk lusien veil. Carol Messer was fer sister's maid of honer_with_JeanSeuten Stoutenburg of Virginia-Beach as attendant Lt. Alvin D. Branch was his brother's bést man, with Dr. T. R. Garrett and_ Grayson Whitehurst, Patricia Messer Is Bride of Lt. L. O. B. Branch, Jr. MRS. L. 0, BRANCH JR. ushers > | A reception for the 100 guests followed at the Rotunda Inn. Fol- lowing a four month honeymoon through the Western States and Mexico, they will live in Virginia Beach, Va. Music Student Gets A's SOUTHFIELD TOWNSHIP — Bertrarg Devor Gable, 13 Mite road, was one of 41 students garnering a perfect record in the school of music during summer school séssions at the University of Michigan—113 students achieved the all A record at the university. Dr. John as to Talk WATERFORD TOWNSHIP—Dr. John Naz will speak on immuniza- tion and communicable diseases at 8 p. m. tonight before the Water- ford Village PTA. A film on civil defense will also be shown. County Calendar mun Club House from 6 p.m.-13:0 turday both of Virginia Beach, serving as¢— Southfield to Put Up ‘No H fi * Si unTINg SIGNS SOUTHFIELD TOWNSHIP—No hunting ‘ signs will be posted throughout the township, the town- ship board decided this week. Advance payment of the first bill for $1,882.75 ‘covering two Dec. 31 for the use of the South months period from Nov. 10 to Oakland County incinesator which will go into operation Nov. 10 was approved. Dress uniforms for the officers— chief, lieutenant, and captain, of the loca) fire department, were granted. The township will pay $75 the first year, and $30 a year maintenance for each man. “. Grange at Holly Plans ‘Booster Night’ Supper HOLLY—Rose Grange “Booster Night” program at 7:30 Friday wil] feature a cooperative supper, with rolis and beverage furnished. An auction of produce and other donated articles will follow. “fy WILMA GREENWAY U af in sail i Pike “St, here. The former sportsman afd auto confined to bed and an armchair, he called for the fa- mitiar materials activities. Above, he mixes background is done on plywood, BUGGY PAINTER TURNS ARTISTPontiac-born Ralph B. Johnson, who started painting bhorseless carriages in 1898, graduated to art painting three years ago when a heart attack curtailed his colors for a new picture. The painting of the Lord's Supper in the wood ferms the from California E. Pike St. and the natural Johnson, who lived for many airport in Waterford T He is visiting with the Louis A. Buggy Painter Returns as Artist panels of the wall in the picture. where he now ing though. He's having too good a time reminiscing. He's well known in the sports world. He played tackle with the | Detroit Heralds, forerunner to the- | Lions, back. when Briggs Stadium {was still Navin Field. Had the. Orioles during World War I, too, tell you that young Fisher was a “good feller,” not averse to sitting In on a hand of poker | with the boys. With -a little prodding, he'll tell you about the Airport Baseball {Team he organized in Waterford | Township, and what great players 4it had. He'll brag how that team | ‘beat the Fisher Body semi-pro jteam that went to the. national jchampionship finals in the early | 1940s." y | But though sports are out for jhim in the future, Johnson isn’t the man to waste any time on regrets. He's absorbed with the 735 S$. Rochester Road ee ee 1949 International 42 Ton Pickup 1951 Chevrolet Sedan Delivery 1951 Chevrolet Suburban Carryall 1950 Chevrolet Club Coupe Crissman Chevrolet Co. - OLive 2-9721 _| Moses didn't start till she was 83, and I've still got 10 years on her.”. Bricks Bury 2 in Troy Crash Truck and Cor Collision and bruises. Troy offitets William Schwandt and David Bratopp uncovered the Drinkards from the brick covered car. Teen Canteen to Play Host to Disc Jockeys MILFORD — During the month ot October, the Milford Teen-Can- teen will be host to many local dise jockeys who will spin platters from 9:00 to 12:00 for dancing. Saturday night Joe Van will be- severa] hostesses to the guest will be chosen at a meeting of the of- ficers and junior counselors this week. Jim Yeager's Trio of the Pontiac Federation of Musicians will have charge of the Oct 16 party, and a full evening of square dancing is in store for the young people. Next Tuesday night both the adult counselors and junior group will meet at the canteen to formu- late plans for the winter months. in the meantime, skating on Wednesday nights 1s supplement- ing the Saturday night dancing. New Hudson Youth Burned in Explosion NEW HUDSON—Dana Sturda- vant, eight year old son of Mr. and Mrs. Don Sturdavant is in eritical condition in St. Joseph Hospital, Ann Arbor, with third degree burns. Playing in his yard yesterday, he threw a lighted match in a gasoline can, which exploded, set- ting his clothing on fire. Neighbor women extinguished the flames. gin the scheduled programs and | * Safety Measure Brings Women Out on Patrol ROCHESTER — The first safety patrol women were added Tuesday to help village school children cross streets safely. Eleanor Aemisegger will now be stationed at West Fourth and Wil- cox street, Lillian Hartwig ig at the West Fifth and Wilcox crossing, and Ruth Helfrich will work at the corner of North Main and Wood- times daily. Funeral Service Set for Waterford Pair WATERFORD TOWNSHIP — Service for Mr. and Mrs. Fred- erick (Anna) Fuchs, of 4315 Wa- terloo St., will be held at 2 p.m. Saturday at the Christian Lu theran Church, Waterford, with burial in Lakeview. Cemetery, Clarkston. The will lie in state at the Bendle Home, Holly, until noon Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. Fuchs were killed in an auto crash near Saginaw Tuesday. Surviving Mrs. Fuchs, 68, are two daughters, Mrs. Dorothy M. Boice of Waterford and Mrs. Helen E. Thompson, of Reno, Nev., three sens, Harold Fuchs of Waterford brothers, Frederick and Henry Keller of Detroit, Edgar Keller of Pleasant Ridge, Carl of Frazer, and Ernest of St. Petersburg, Fila. Surviving Mr. Fuchs, Tl, are three sisters, Mrs. Laura Miller, Mandy Sheely, all of two brothers, George Fuchs of troit and Oscar Fuchs of St. Shores. Rochester Church Women’s Groups Slate Meetings ROCHESTER — The fall sched- ule of Women's Fellowship meet- ings of home of Mrs. Robert Cook Sunday The Mission study group will meet the same day with Mrs. Har- vey J. Toles, at 1:30 p.m., and the Olivet Guild will meet at 2 p.m. at the church to make cancer pads. : Tuesday. County Births Mr. and Mre GOlennden Pletcher are the parents of a daughter, Cynthia Marie, born Sept. 18 ROCHESTER — The Board of Education voted this week to re- tain H. E. Beyster and Associates for the new high school building. WILLET KLING 280-332 Main Street NOW SHOWING... DREXEL KROEHLER SPRAGUE-CARLTON _ BIGELOW-SANFORD - Furniture at Its Finest ~ Always at OL 2-2121 — OL 1 SIMMONS SPRING AIR eB -9642 ; Pick Architects to Draw Plans for Rochester High WEEK-END SPECIAL! 80 SQUARE PERCALE PRINTS PLAINS ob O° Reg. 49c Value Open. Fri. & Sat. Nights "til 9 P. M. Aisles: 312 Main St. Rochester Free Parking Rear of Store Distinctive Christmas cards with en extre—the Hallmark on_the back proves you chose the best! Many other designs in these boxes at $2.95 and $3.95, imprint- ing included. PURDY'S DRUG STORE 521 Main $e. Rochester a FOR YOURSELF 31% Larry Jerome ROCHESTER FORD DEALER ; “Por More Than 30 Years—A Good Pigce to Buy” Moin Street at the Bridge - OPEN EVES. Wife OL 1-971! i Ra Giants Win Ist, Send Antoneli Against Wynn Today ’ By GAYLE TALBOT have been sold, but it is difficult) S#me winners owned by the Indi- | possibly give a Medians the most ;ners was the manner in which NEW YORK w—It will be neces. | trouble of any Ghamt plicher. sary to go on afd play out the World Series, for all the tickets Bob Lemont one Pp the two 23! Tribe to think of anything that might | 495. Wynn, the other big winner, | happen from here on that the boys Early didn't dish up in that 10-inning | ¥@% Lopez's choice for the second | was their wonder boy and official | with a looping single into short | the Polo/ Same, starting at the usual ! p.m. | team electrifier. Willie Mays. who right Which Don Mueller kicked | cromd.+saved the game from being lost | around somewhat, permitting opener yesterday at field stands to wrap it up for the underdog New York Giants 5-2._ As the result the Giants today were in an advantageous position. They have the fully rested Johnny Antonelli. Indians..today. Antonelli, a hander. = from the start to) ot Te . Se = Dae te HATLESS WILLIE MAKES York Giants hits 3rd base safely Adva at, 4 é a TZi-game winner. poised for a second thrust at the ternoon left- | eae ~ Thompson's single to right in the yesterday's defeat. time, - Another capacity | their relief star, the veteran Marv | Grissom, in its tracks after starter, Sal Maglie, suddenly felt his 37 years in the eighth inning. And tast, but far from least, jt | walked in to stop the their | | dent that Maglie was short on con THE PONTIAC PRESS, “THURSDAY, the lefty - swinging Rhodes for slumping Mente Irvin. From the very start it was. evi trol. ‘He hit Al Smith to open Bobby Avila, the American League's leading hitter, followed | yesterday's 52.571 turn-| with his truly amazing over-shoul-| Smith to race to third swipe was very much Oriental variety for which the Polo | Grounds is notorious. No shorter | home run can be bit in any ball > yr wt 4 less Willie — Pr x 2% of . * Also of glad tidings to tft win- -—— ’ ~ * bBo apt wien Mays of the New from Ist on Hank d inning of Wednesday's World ey matching out,- was etpected to be on hand |Yer catch of ‘Vic Werte’ towering | with a weather forecast of cloudy | 450-foot smash to the center-field | Larry Doby and Al Rosen on pop and warm Tt is true that Rhodes climactic | none’ out in the eighth. the | The boy from Alabama didn't| centerfield wall that would be wall with two Indians on base and get a hit off Lemon's sinking stuff, but he gave notice {hat he will be | | he telling factor all the indians had the same targel to Indian ace to pass Hank Thompson |) Mays « shoot at all.through the sunny af- | parpasely to-set up a possible four te ‘double play. and that gave Du rocher the opportunity he had been ; looking > for all afternoon to insert |g te £,~ <= ant ~ Time Weather— Mostiy cloudy with temperature rd degrees First for Giants e POLO GROUNDS, New York W—The official box score of: the ist game of the 194 World Series {Wednesday CLEVELAND (4). NEW YORK «N) Ld AHR PM heme run for ingle te on Cleveland «Ai New York «N) oo te oo > © Muetier 2 Irvin RB) Stor = Muetier Werte Thompson. Rhodes Mm» Werte NR aad Mays 6G Irvin, Dante (A) 19. New York «N) ge 3 Thompeon 2: 3, tLemon ‘1, Ortesom 3 Deby oly eb: Orissom ®@ AB Lemen (Derk Magill Olyan). Them Ciriasom. Muyeller). thane out in @th) Liddie © in ‘s. Crte jsom f in 23. R-ER -Magite 2-2, Liddle 0-0 Criesom 6.6, Lemon 6-6. HAP.@ ‘on Least Pet New ante: e Lee Che vel oi cis 1 cong et wade Cleveland wo on o—2 aie Moe eet oe 3-4 4 ‘Megee Grasse (10); Magtic. eas Westram , and t | stath and seventh games (if necessary) af Left ih ie (Mitchell, — 2 (@triekiend pseon + in + om Faves ; “Over UCLA ‘11’ Arrive on West Coast Tomorrow feared football team arrives on the scerie Thursday for its intersections al game with UCLA Friday night, observers look for a close conteste and a Maryland victory, * * . dawn, with. a workout . \later in the day in Memorial Cole liseum Maryland was rated sixth in the Associated Press national poll week, most likely because Jim Tatum’'s team has played one game, a 20-0 victory over me: tucky UCLA was tabbed. in the a spot, Coach Red Sanders has seen . the: Bruins run over a weak .| Diego Naval Training Center and defeat Kansas, 32-7, last weel, ABR " Amin it 4 ' ' br ib 4 ‘ | UCLA shoots from the outset with Avil 2 5 ar a Deby cf 3 Ot Muctior ef 6 | & sophofiiore, Doug Bradley, in the Rosen, Yo § @ F Mays ef 3 1 6 key left halfback spot of the Sam | Werte th 5 69 @4 Tmpen HF I 1] * 1D Regaldd 0 0 @ trvin i » « qi ders single-wing attack, Bradley tira 6 6 6 F Rhodes | ee | ' Philley rf 2) 0 @ Wims. % 6 06 6 | has thus far shown better than the A-Majenki @ © 6 Wot rm. € ‘ ® ? a. tailback, Primo Villanueva, WMitehel! @ @ 6 agile p e Dente a 8 8 8 Ltade. po ao completing 8 of 15 passes for 163 Hitrkt'ind. ss 3} @ © Grissom p | © 0] yards to ho completions by Villa C-Pope. rf 1 6 0 Totals 36 8 nueva Hegen © a ee 2 E-lyne. tb 1 @ @ ; Bob Davenport goes af fullback topes e _ |fer UCLA, with Terry DeBay af A Announced as batter for Philley | the quarter, or blocking, back, and im eh RB Walked for Majeski in ath Jim Decker at right half C. Called out om strikes for Strick * land in ath DD Ran for Werte ty 10th Tatum will i off with B&- @truct ‘out for Negan im 10th Boxold at quarter for his “split. offense Halfbacks ‘will be Rontile Walker and Joe Hornirig, and Bietski, one of several Terp Ameriva nape, goes at fullback, Southern Cal Faces Wildcats. | | | | 5 . y Terps Are Slated ie = = LOS ANGELES uw — Maryland’ and ‘most of the coast conferengp’ a Magtie ‘fmith) WR Lemon, W- for a home run. Mays Joins Gionfriddo, Martin, Stanky Slaughter on List of World Series Great at one victory apiece, In the geme- with the Giants ahead and one out in the 5th, . dee S. Fae tbs bd ; g i ad z if Mi H H + ; ve i i i H z 4 : : i Es Z f LT z I ; s | - LJ "Wh Honor Cordes BEND, ind. “CINS)}— Dame officials announced that Frank Carideo, quarterback with the : Reckne-coached Irish in 1929 "ghd 1990, will be honored between N. J. Gat: Dadved Of the Notre, Dame-Pur te eS Press Writer plaque admitting him to the tiona} Football Hal) of Fame ag @ridirén shrine is located at Rut- gers University, New Brunswick Declaring that he could be found “ is in motion. His momentum may | | RS LORE a ORNS LIM In 1924 they beat the great Wal- ter Johnson and the Washington Senators 4.3 in 12 innings, but lost the series in seven games. In 1936 jthey beat Red Ruffing and the In three of their previous series, | Yankees ¢1, but dropped the series the Giants won the first game, but | in six games. In 1951 they whipped | Ritie Reynolds and the Yankees 5-1 Jim Lee Howell, head coach of the New York Footbal! Giants, is nicknamed “Stnator.” He once was elected to the State legislature in his native Arkansas. Bi trepent BSE ¢ py ve areio Ne a alee, ak. ee * ‘ se hed Sate The TOP BUY ofthe year! gramercy park suits— An Outstanding Value at One of America’s finest names sold exclusively at the Lion Store. Your choice of the new all wool charcoal flannels. Or, if you desire, all wool sharkskins, gabardines, or worsteds. Gramercy Park insures you the finest possible in a moderately priced suit. Regulars — Shorts — Longs 2 Y Men’s All Wool Clothes at NO EXTRA COST! Special! Reg. to $55 + Lip Lined Topcoats These coats are finer imported tweeds, coverts, and gabardines, which are regularly to $55.00. We are offering these outstanding coats to our Lion Store customers at the exceptionally low price of ’ ome ; ; é + | ate See 5 i bay A spy | ~ ARG eR RARE —_— ws a i ee dee te i | g8 ; i i i Z ee : i g ra Hi Hi ~aet 5; ig ig around a point either way. Trading was fast right at the start. The ac- cumulation of overnight orders was cleared away quickly, and the tape : Hl ? z F i a oH | i [ i Hi I E $5 | i Both yesterday and today, the market was under the influence of pa; | the World Series so far as atten- tion to business was concerned. Chrysler, at the head of yester- most ‘active list up 1%, openéd today on 7,000 shares up. % at 69%, and then it gained a little ij ip FF i i a (| if ; ¥ 2 * $e », g af Fes 8 * General Motors opened on 1,200 shares off *s at 92. Continental Motors started on 2,500 shares up e if i Ms i =o ss g & New York Stocks = as g ¢ Grain Prices E Hh 33 Fie: F t ie dl Et Sat fiat on ie ve de sess ts - FSEAIESTS- sift HY 333°" 233_- i ft F ra z ie i Ft Exf Hi ; + SESERSssSmsl ae -sSeeeeszs © ——SeVee Seer =u Bees @+8e eeuveea Kvepuvaeees ¥ aE 22257 Patt CEBESEBEE “*ee-8" wea if zt SPlSeslatsecsess: ~~ = = uw « : S¥olrevsustz Ld ZEs- wee ¢ ey f Field - - > - rTHTE Sus -sees Wa . : — id se, gee2 al PUT ‘Aus z 3 5 : z i 77 f § Z i a7 H . ae i Hi F i dP z g RUSSSeoUSSeEuessesus 2222 F22 = a HH 42-8 eS SESE SSE SESS SSUewe YH «~~ £82 EBHSBOS i oe rae HPs : 2 » 7 el ei a) they Bice+tee ‘ sees e [ e484 «< g 2 Biecersccpleerectsntes-scussccecerncceseesces ue8eex: i icy A: age fF, Ey i z i Pt! Ba i , f 2 A #3 f Fe ii f é ) Se-8ueHee 44 e-—ve = “ee —" » >i hy Suixsezksss $37 7 : "5 a = ie 5 oe 7 Z ; ? ai Stautser2ess-804s-sB_.exuusecesvess<-.xses OS 6841S YUEN EDO~SONEHOtO—% ae ee -_- z H a" 5 7 : : he sa5° * ga F | iF t fe 22000 i aaa ; ‘ EF E F ' aii t rt ii; ~¢ 2Betss-sesssucisesse ¥ ' i i hj reef i 7 i z = s ’ sores i 4 ¥ i ve ie SBSeres seeitte #33375{7 3>> | g2aBee23 Fee2e—ee ~~ Sse sz iiott at j : Hg 88 fi i Ue iti [ ie i sf i i Ut # al u 33 i i : H aA # iy | ff Ps 333 id . ait Bi “: .THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 86, 1954. Series Causes Sluggish Mart + | market wag thoroughly mixed to | |day in early dealings. Not a singe major division dis- played a pronounced moypment in either direction. BIG PARADE—Willie Mays, Hank Thompson and Dusty Rhodes, in order, cross plate in the 10th inning of World “Series opener Wednesday at Polo Grounds after Rhodes hit a home run to right-field— to give the Giants a 52 victory over the Indians. Tank Contract Pleases Solon Kefauver Says Award to Chrysler Will Boost National Security— WASHINGTON —The award of a contract for new M48 tanka to Chrysler Corp. will make the na- tion's defense ‘‘more secure,"’ Sen Kefauver (D-Tenn) said yesterday. Ketauve rsaid in a statement he had fought for more tank makers “on the basis that it Was uneco- nomic and dangerous for the gov- ernment to depend upon one sup plier—General Motors—in its tank production.” Kefauver's comment came on announcement by the Philadel. - pala Ordnance District of award of a $160,601.00 contract te Carysier’s Newark, Del., plant. Previously, Kefauver said, there were four suppliers. He listed them | as American Locomotive, General | Motors, Ford and Chrysler. He said American Locomotive and Ford went out of production because of cutbacks in oriers, leaving only two suppliers last fall Business Briefs Thomas M. Fuller, 36, has been named vice president of the Wil- liam W. Donald- ton Insdrance Michigan ; lives at 1129 Fairfax, Birmingham. *|Pontiac Man Charged With 1st Degree Murder A first degree murder against Charlies R. Herron, a Business Survey Shows . eo... ae Pee * 3 . abs Building Tapers Off Here but Still Ahead of 1953 Building permits gained in the business survey made by the Pontiac’ Chamber of Commerce in August in both number and valuation over August 1953 but were less than those in July of this year. _Electric power was less than in August 1953 but more than the previous month of this year. More than the total for August last year, but less than July 1954 were bank debits te customers (exclusive of public funds.) Industrial payrolls, postal receipts, number passengers carried on City Bus Lines, gas and water consumption were less than August 1953 and less than July 1964 Bank Debits to Customers Accounts (Exclusive of Public Punds) Industrial “Pafrotis Ges Consumption jcurtt) Water Consumption (eale) Aug 1064 duly tes aug 1069 964.427 Tie 057 204. 076 948 067 Gon 612. 76).613 616.068, 066 $14 186.679 s ee * Wee ¢ #6 306.68 381.304 re tee a7 6 eo = 6 | 306 e986 6 seen ' \ $ 639 S00 $ 881 e006 * 108.424 G00 112.026, 600 124.040.) 97.006 107 26 690.694 a7 ete. Th68 | enn. 008 G00 464.40) 000 068 100 900. Accused of Forging While Behind Bars Minn, . ®—Wilford Devens, 29. Mankato, was charged with second degree forgery yester day after making out a-false check for $110 in his jail cell and having paid $10 for his trouble by Devens, Police said Devens gave the check to a. prisoner in an adjoining cell, who cashed it after he was .| freed from a, drunkenness 338 S44 4LALAAA LA AA dh Le officers said they found the $100 cash proceeds hidden under a jail | basin The innocent casher of the check, was not held. Devens had been in jali for investigation of bad check dealings y Engagement Announced LUM—Mr. and Mrs. Rodney Jarvis of Lapeer have announced the engagement of their daughter Frances to Lyle A. Koyle, son of Lodge Calendar Bpecial communication of Roose- -+ velt Lodge No, 510, F. & A. M., 22 State St. Thursday, Sept. 30, at 7:30 p.m. M. M. degree. Raymond Kneisel, W. M. Adv Regular communication of Pon- + | Gace Lodge, No. 21, F. & A. M., Fri- day, October Ist. Lodge opens at 7:30 p. m. Robert C. Burnes, W. M. News in Brief William Jones of 175 Lake St., told Pontiae Police today that thieves broke {nto his poultry mar- ket at 203 Lake St., early today ,and took §50 in small bills and change from two cash registers. Entry was rade by cutting the front door hasp, police said Wilbert L. Verpooten, 18, of 467 Raeburn “St... paid a $75 fine Wednesday after he pleaded guilty te reckless driving before Pontiac Judge Maurice E. Finnegan Bake, rummage sale, seme furni- ture, Fri. & Sat. Oct. 1 and 2. Open 9a.m. 193 S. Saginaw St. —Adv sale Fri. and Sat. 262 Rummage Wesson, Church of God and Christ, Sam. to6p.m Adv Rummage sale, Stevens Hall, Fri. 10 to 12 a. m e Ady Rummage sale, Sat. 7 2. m. at 23 Pine St —Adv sale, Embury Methed- Rummage ist Church, 14 Mile E. and Croft, Birmingham. 1 block E. of Wood- ward Ave. Priday, Oct. 1, 9 to 5 Fellow the crewd te St, Bene- dict's ninth annual roast beef din- ner. Noon until 6 p.m. W. Huron at Lynn St. Oct. 3 —Adv St. Andrew's Epis- copal Church 4386 Dixie Hwy, Drayton Plains Sat. Oct. 2, 5 30 to 7:30 . Adv Rummage sale, First Presbyter- fan OChureh, Gat. 8:30 —Adv Zenta Club Rummage Sale, 2 6. Gaginaw, Oct. l and 2. —Adv. Waterford Tewnship Taxpayers Counell.. Watch for our next meet- ing date. FE 56-5347. —Adv. ball Pa PE stmt CA Mitchell (weereereseeeesees. WHEEL ALIGNMENT X AND BALANCE THE TWO FRONT WHEELS— $12.00 Value—Work Guaraniced ‘79 THURS., FRI. and SAT. FIRESTONE STORE 146 W. Huren St. a ' Undetermined Chrysler Bid Leaves — Future of GM Facilities at Grand Blanc in Doub? - DETROIT (UP) — General Mo tors spokesmen said today it was too early to tell what effect re assignment of the contract to build Patton M48 medium tanks te which has been turning out tanks The Fisher Body Division General Motors has been building the tanks. but the Army said Chrysler Corp. had underbid GM by $7,600,000 on production of the tanks starting next June 1 and had been assigned the contract, The tank contract was only 1 of 2 defense awards for Chrys. ler announced by the Army -yes- terday. c . The Army said Chrysler wifl start production soon on the new- est addition to the Army's grows ing family of deadly-accurate guid- ed missiles. The Army said Chrysler has been given contracts totaling $22,000,009 to start production of “The Red- stone’ in the near future. The Redstone is a ground-to-ground ° missile designed for use against enemy troops and installations and presumably can be equipped with atomic "warheads Details of “The Redstone,” which still is a secret project, weren't revealed. But it is known to have greater range than “The Corporal” which now is in the hands af troops. ‘The Corporal” is report ed to have a reach of more than WO miles Ants can lift q weight 0 times their own weight. If weight in- creased in direct proportion to size, a five-pound ant could easily lift a ton. , —— FE 2-9281 SA A*tAL LALA A hd eee —_ Agency, effective | 1100" TRADE-IN , of , mats ) ‘MONEY DOWN! Many he Come In and See! WATCH FOR THE — G-E Auto. Washer..... reg. $319.95 G-E Deyée «oii. 0s reg. 239.95 . | $559.90 OPEN oor ; SATURDAY | | Trade-in ...........555 400;00 | Te P.M. 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